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C) because we got A) in the form of Snake Mountain, even though there is a large colour change and slight details, and we to a lesser extend B) was Fright Zone, and the changes are larger but better ones in the final product.

C) seems a completely new concept and playset, so I of course enjoy that far more, and would have been a happy addition to the childhood days.

I like all three! I wouldn't of minded having any of them as a kid to add to my collection (I only ever had the front shell to Castle Grayskull with a homemade wooden jawbridge 'til I was 12; then I got Snake Mountain). "A" would have been nice because it would have given another playset for the good guys, since the bad guys always had two (well, you could put part of Point Dread onto Castle Grayskull, but then it just became one playset again; when it was by itself--if you went with the minicomics story--it was Skeletor's second playset).

From my youth and hometown when I was a kid...He-Matt and the Masters of the Kunaverse!

C is very, very cool, but I voted A. C, as Whiplash7 said, is kinda all over the place. That, and I don't really see what it is. How big is it? A has so much more potential! It can be folded and carried, it's generic and all-purpose (you could use that for so many toylines!) and it looks real fun! I wonder what the other side is like?

"Since you got here by not thinking, it seems reasonable to expect that, in order to get out, you must start thinking." ~ Tock, the Watchdog

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... A has so much more potential! It can be folded and carried, it's generic and all-purpose (you could use that for so many toylines!) and it looks real fun! I wonder what the other side is like?

Probably just as much going on as the original Snake Mountain playset. A big. Fat. Nothing. Seriously, even as a kid I thought the original Snake Mountain was the worst excuse for a playset I'd ever seen. The outside was an uninspired mess with barely any space for your figures to stand, and as for the inside, they might as well have painted a big middle finger in there, because there was absolutely no playability to it! The outside was barely any better, with that snake that looked like it was jammed in there from some other playset, and the even more out-of-place feature, the fricken wolf head that you talk into. Good Lord! This was like the playset that your retarded uncle put together from parts he found at garage sales. The only part of it that was remotely interesting was the big weird Skeksis face that was inexplicably carved into the front.

I suppose I should talk about the actual playsets we're voting on.

Well, the first one is head-and-shoulders above the Snake Mountain we got in the 80s, but it has a lot going against it for its connection to that failset. First and foremost being the same lack of usable playspace. If you're going to design a playset that's taller than it is wide, you have to do it like the original Grayskull, where there's multiple levels with enough room to actually play. This one has that same awful bridge that you can fit two figures on, but it's so narrow that they have to walk sideways and can't even actually face each other! There's also that stupid gate to nowhere at the top with enough room to have one figure up there wondering why he's all alone with a slope leading up to it that's too steep and narrow to put anyone. Then there's the little hole where Zodac is peeing on the wall. It has no discernable way for anyone to get up there, and once again, it's too small to fit even one figure unless they awkwardly stand sideways. The snake on this appears to be a slightly less awful-looking version than the one that came on the actual Snake Mountain, so that's OK, and there also seems to be a laser cannon, which is cool, but even this is sticking out of a hole that's too small to aim it anywhere. All that said, I do prefer the deco here to the reprehensible Snake Mountain, and if this was executed in a bit larger configuration with a larger footprint to accommodate what they seem to have thought the play features would've been, it could end up being a decent playset, but as-is it's on the lame side.

With the second one, it looks like they actually improved on it when it became the Fright Zone. The one shown here however, is pretty lackluster. From the tree with hands to the not-too-terrifying Venus flytraps to the smiling green meatball, I don't find anything about this playset to look very menacing, though I am amused that Duncan was inept enough to be captured by this preposterous thing.

The third one has the advantage of not being something we've seen as a playset in different form already. It also has a lot of great features we never got on any playsets. It's got a great layout with multiple levels to display figures on. It's water-based, so Mer-Man finally has a place to hang out! While it's a rather grim idea, a drowning chamber would be tons of fun. You could pretend Adam was Luke in the Bacta Tank, put Ram Man in there to see if he makes bubbles, or have Mer-Man in there reading the paper or whatever; it'd be awesome! Then there's the working waterfall, so you could have Teela take a shower, all the fun stuff we would've loved to have done as a kid!

So, that's why my vote went to 'C'.

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